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Thursday, July 12, 2007

BE SURE TO ALSO READ THE ARTICLE FOLLOWING THIS FROM THE NATION ON THE GOP ATTEMPT TO PRIVATIZE MEDICARE. COINCIDENCE.

Bill Scher: Dr. Gupta's Bias.

Rachel Sklar and Michael Moore himself have already done a great job taking CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta to task for his biased reporting on SiCKO.

But what was most striking to me during the Moore-Gupta face-off on Larry King Live was when Gupta showed the heart of his bias, a bias against having our government guarantee universal health care.

Gupta says to Moore, "You criticize the government so soundly. But you're willing to hand over one of our most precious commodities, our health care in this country, to the government."

Moore rebutted, "I actually love our government ... It does a great job of administrating Social Security ... the problem is who we've put in power who holds office."

Then in response, Gupta made a completely misleading attack on Medicare:

Michael, one of the best examples of health care, at least some sort of universal health care, would be Medicare. I think you would agree with that.

It's going to go bankrupt by 2019. It's going to be $28 trillion in debt by 2075...would you say that this is going to be still a working system 20 years from now?

Is this some evidence that our government can't be directed to fix our broken health care system? Economist-blogger Dean Baker doesn't think so:

CNN's health care analyst is now telling people that Medicare is going bankrupt. What does this mean?

Medicare's costs are projected to exceed its revenue and drain the surplus from its trust fund in a bit over a decade, but this has been true at several points in the past. Did Congress tell tens of millions of beneficiaries to get lost? No, Congress appropriated the money needed to keep the program going...

...If Dr. Gupta meant to imply that Medicare, as a government program is uniquely inefficient, then he is way off the mark. According to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (Table 13) per beneficiary costs have risen in nominal dollars by 519.5 percent since 1980. By contrast, the cost per enrollee of private insurance has risen by 676.6 percent over this same period.

That gets at the heart of Gupta's bias.

The pressures on Medicare's finances are not the fault of our government, but of skyrocketing health care costs across the board.

Yet Gupta's cherry-picks his facts to attack a government guarantee of universal care, and raise the prospect of dismantling Medicare, just like how conservatives sought to do the same with Social Security.

Health care costs are a major problem, but as Baker notes, "Eliminating Medicare would raise health care costs, not lower them."

Whereas directing our government to ensure universal health care, as Medicare already does for seniors, can contain costs by pooling risk and maximizing bargaining power.

In the proposed Health Care for America plan -- a Medicare-style public plan for those under 65 which would compete with private insurance -- policy architect Jacob Hacker writes:

Because Medicare and the Health Care for America Plan would bargain jointly for lower prices and join forces to improve quality, they would have enormous combined leverage to hold down costs. Cross-national evidence and the historical experience of Medicare show conclusively that concentrated purchasing power is by far the most effective means by which to restrain the price of medical services...

...Other nations spend much less for the same medical services than we do because their insurance systems bargain for lower prices. And though Medicare covers less than a seventh of the U.S. population, it has still controlled costs substantially better than the private sector, especially since the introduction of payment controls in the mid-1980s.

When was the last time you saw a mainstream media report that merely raised the possibility that our government's Medicare plan does a better job at containing costs than private insurance companies?

There is one thing said by Gupta that I have no disagreement with: "It makes it very hard to advance the argument if you're not getting the numbers right."

A slightly different version on this post originally appeared at the Campaign for America's Future blog.

[The Huffington Post Full Blog Feed]
8:29:24 AM    comment []

Politics: The Medicare Privatization Scam. Prescription for a nightmare: Trudy Lieberman uncovers the Republicans' effort to destroy Medicare as we know it.

[The Nation: Top Stories]
8:22:24 AM    comment []

The Deadly Occupation. Veterans of conscience have come forward with evidence that US forces kill Iraqi civilians every day, The Editors write. We must reckon with the consequences and bring this deadly occupation to an end.

[The Nation: Top Stories]
8:10:16 AM    comment []

The Other War: Iraq Veterans Bear Witness. Investigating the impact of the war on Iraqi civilians, Chris Hedges and Laila Al-Arian reveal disturbing patterns of behavior by US troops in Iraq--brutal acts that often go unreported and almost always go unpunished.

[The Nation: Top Stories]
8:06:35 AM    comment []

Stan Goff: Support the Troops....

...is a kind of loyalty oath, based on a cardboard caricature of troops being virtuous post-adolescents who are being ever so brave. It evades the reality of how we raise boys to associate desire with domination, and of the locker-room arms race of cynicism and casual cruelty. It's the Boy-War Culture; and it does not primarily produce virtuous youth who are occasionally and tragically traumatized. It's primary output are across-the-horizon sociopaths, who revel in murder, torture, and rape as essential aspects of a probative masculinity... and who become the role models for yet another generation of men who associate male sexuality with conquest.

This video is not representative of a few bad apples. I'll wager that I am among the top 1% hereabouts in terms of how much experience I have with this culture... how much time I have spent in this lethal locker-room with the Boy-War Culture. This video of a former Abu Ghraib guard could have been shot of half the people I worked with in the Infantry and in Special Operations.

Send this to everyone you can, so we can overwhelm the inevitable "bad apple" apologetics from the Sycophant Press; and send it along to your Congressperson. Tell them that this is what we are re-importing from our little war. Ask them if these are the troops we are supposed to support.

And let's not be coy, suggesting that this is Bush's fault, or that this is just the war. This is the logical outcome of male socialization in our imperial core. This started far earlier than the war. Abu Ghraib was a microscope into our whole culture, and into the conquest-connection of late imperial patriarchy: conquest of nature, conquest of women, conquest of colonies.

[The Huffington Post Full Blog Feed]
7:34:07 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2007 Patricia Thurston.



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